Poverty remained high in North Carolina last year, according to new Census Bureau data released today. The new data highlights that many people have not benefitted from the state’s weak economic recovery and that North Carolina must do more to help struggling people afford basics like decent housing, nutritious food, and reliable child care, and transportation.

One in five North Carolinians lived in poverty in 2013, equating less than $24,000 a year for a family of four. The median annual income in North Carolina adjusted for inflation did not rise between 2012 and 2013 and is lower now compared to 2009 when the official economic recovery began. Yet other sources show that incomes at the top have grown and the gaps between the top and bottom and top and middle have widened.

North Carolina lawmakers have yet to rebuild what was lost during the recession. Throughout the economic recovery, they have either made deep cuts to or provided inadequate investments for early childhood development, public schools, the UNC System, and nonprofits promoting job and business development in the state’s economically distressed areas. These are key services that invest in people’s future and build a strong economy that offers all families the opportunity to thrive. Lawmakers have also dismantled services that help people get back on their feet when they are struggling, including unemployment benefits, job training programs, and the Earned Income Tax Credit that makes work pay and helps parents avoid raising their children in poverty.

The new Census data shows that progress towards eliminating poverty in the state is stuck:

North Carolina’s poverty rate is 2.1 percentage points higher than the U.S. poverty rate, and has the 11th highest poverty rate in the nation.

The state’s poverty rate (17.9 percent) and median income ($45,906) remained statistically unchanged, meaning there has been no progress against fighting poverty or raising middle class living standards for the average North Carolinian since 2009.

Nearly 8 percent of North Carolinians live in extreme poverty, which means they live below less than half of the poverty line—or about $12,000 a year for a family of four.

Children continue to have the highest poverty rate (25.2 percent) compared to other age groups. One in 4 children live in poverty compared to 1 in 10 older adults.

People of color are much more likely to struggle below the poverty line. 32.5 percent of Latinos, 28 percent of African Americans, and 28.9 of American Indians lived in poverty in 2013 while 12.3 percent of non-Hispanic whites live in poverty.

Cutting investments in people and communities is not the way to boost our economy and create a better future. We should take this opportunity to put our state on a better path by stopping the next round of tax cuts that primarily benefit the wealthy and use those resources to invest in strategies that will build a larger middle class by helping people move up and out of poverty.

This is the first post of a blog series that will take a detailed look at the 2013 US Census poverty data released today.Read the entire series here.